French economy to get Olympics boost, says central bank
PARIS — The French central bank said Friday that the nation’s economy should get a considerable bump from the Olympic and Paralympic Games.
After having expanded by 0.3 percent in the second quarter, the Banque de France said it expects the French economy to grow by nearly 0.5 percent in the July-September quarter.
The Olympic Games officially opened in late July and the Paralympic Games finish in September.
The central bank put up to 0.25 percentage points of that growth down to the impact of the Games.
Its forecast is broadly in line with that of France’s statistics agency INSEE, which expects a 0.3 percentage point increase in third quarter growth due to the Games, taking overall growth in the quarter to 0.5 percent.
There was considerable concern ahead of the world’s largest sporting event that it may in fact be a drag on the French economy as many tourists who would normally visit Paris were staying away.
Hotels and airlines like Air France said they had seen a drop in bookings.
The Banque de France said there was still considerable uncertainty about its forecast, with the positive effect from the Games confronting a negative effect from the uncertain political situation after no clear winner emerged from parliamentary elections in June and July.
In any case the economic boost from the Games will be fleeting.
It will “mostly disappear in the fourth quarter,” the central bank’s chief economist, Olivier Garnier, told journalists.
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